They're people, not some pristine artifacts that should be locked in a display case and only looked at from a distance. If they show interest in our culture, we shouldn't hide it from them in an effort to prevent it from changing them. Wanting to learn from them while preventing them from learning from us would be hypocritical and condescending.

What would you think about leaving books about naturopathic medicine and anti-vaccine literature in hospital waiting rooms? Some times people should be called on their bullshit, even if its something they take comfort in.

Because they don't think about it critically and the people who make the decision and agree to let the Gideon's leave Bibles in their rooms are likely Christians themselves. I'm not saying that most hotels are intentionally promoting one religion over another, but rather that they are complicit in the act and the individual people making the decisions to allow it don't realize what they are doing due to their own inadvertent bias. They just assume that Bibles in hotel rooms is normal since its been going on for so long and don't think about what it might mean to people who don't share their religion.

The place I used to work disabled right click context menus in an attempt to stop copy and paste for "security reasons". (And during the same update they added access to PowerShell which somehow included the ability to run it as admin).